The Prime Time Rhyme Of The Last Poets Volume 2 / Original Release / CD / MP3 / V0 (VBR)
Audio With External Links Item Preview
Share or Embed This Item
audio
The Prime Time Rhyme Of The Last Poets Volume 2 / Original Release / CD / MP3 / V0 (VBR)
On The One (SP 31CD)
- Publication date
- 1996
- Item Size
- 170.9M
This item is available with audio samples only
Review
The Prime Time Rhyme of the Last Poets, Vol. 2 compiles a smattering of tracks from the Last Poets' mid-'70s and '80s albums, and it serves to unearth some unfairly neglected cuts from the group's less famous era. "E Pluribus Unum" is as scathing an excoriation of American society as anything in their catalog set to minimalist African beats, while "Tranquility" has a thick massive wall of jazzy pianos and saxophones to back its message of self-empowerment. Also included is the three-part "Beyonder" suite from Delights of the Garden, an impressive showcase of both the band and guest drummer Bernard Purdie. The real gems, though, are the cuts rescued from the Poets' Oh My People and Freedom Express. Recorded long after the band's commercial fortunes (such as they were) had waned and the group was viewed as relics in the wake of the hip-hop explosion, the albums were ignored, unjustly since the Last Poets had lost little in the intervening years. "What Will You Do?" musically and lyrically could easily fit on the classic This is Madness album, and the ferociously jazzy "Tough Enough" actually benefits from the group's advanced age, since the usual rage about social injustice is tempered with enough hard-won wisdom to strip away any of the self-righteousness that sometimes marred earlier Poets cuts. The last song, 1988's "Unholy Alliance," is a very long history of Europe's colonization of Africa that never seems boring even at 12 minutes. Prime Time Rhyme uncovers some ignored classics from the Last Poets, and fans who don't already own the albums containing these selections should seek it out. ~ Victor W. Valdivia, All Music Guide
The Prime Time Rhyme of the Last Poets, Vol. 2 compiles a smattering of tracks from the Last Poets' mid-'70s and '80s albums, and it serves to unearth some unfairly neglected cuts from the group's less famous era. "E Pluribus Unum" is as scathing an excoriation of American society as anything in their catalog set to minimalist African beats, while "Tranquility" has a thick massive wall of jazzy pianos and saxophones to back its message of self-empowerment. Also included is the three-part "Beyonder" suite from Delights of the Garden, an impressive showcase of both the band and guest drummer Bernard Purdie. The real gems, though, are the cuts rescued from the Poets' Oh My People and Freedom Express. Recorded long after the band's commercial fortunes (such as they were) had waned and the group was viewed as relics in the wake of the hip-hop explosion, the albums were ignored, unjustly since the Last Poets had lost little in the intervening years. "What Will You Do?" musically and lyrically could easily fit on the classic This is Madness album, and the ferociously jazzy "Tough Enough" actually benefits from the group's advanced age, since the usual rage about social injustice is tempered with enough hard-won wisdom to strip away any of the self-righteousness that sometimes marred earlier Poets cuts. The last song, 1988's "Unholy Alliance," is a very long history of Europe's colonization of Africa that never seems boring even at 12 minutes. Prime Time Rhyme uncovers some ignored classics from the Last Poets, and fans who don't already own the albums containing these selections should seek it out. ~ Victor W. Valdivia, All Music Guide
Related Music question-dark
Versions - Different performances of the song by the same artist
Compilations - Other albums which feature this performance of the song
Covers - Performances of a song with the same name by different artists
Song Title | Versions | Compilations | Covers |
---|---|---|---|
E pluribus unum | |||
Tranquility | |||
African slave | |||
Beyonder I | |||
Beyonder II | |||
Beyonder III | |||
Oh my people | |||
What will you do | |||
Tough enough | |||
Unholy Alliance |
- Addeddate
- 2012-09-06 13:37:25
- Album
- The Prime Time Rhyme Of The Last Poets Volume 2
- Artist
- The Last Poets
- Boxid
- OL100020505
- External_metadata_update
- 2019-01-13T20:02:54Z
- Identifier
- wcd_the-prime-time-rhyme_the-last-poets_mp3_v0-vbr_28895860
- Initialrelease
- true
- Noindex
- true
- Releasetype
- anthology
- Source
- CD
- Wcd_uploadDate
- 2010-09-13 12:39:59
- Year
- 1996
comment
Reviews
Reviewer:
brewster
-
favoritefavoritefavoritefavoritefavorite -
January 29, 2017
Subject: E pluribus unum
Subject: E pluribus unum
E pluribus unum is my favorite song by The Last Poets-- it takes apart the words on the dollar bill to reinterpret them.
-brewster
-brewster
There is 1 review for this item. .
47 Views
1 Favorite
DOWNLOAD OPTIONS
MP3 SAMPLE
Uplevel BACK
703.5K
E pluribus unum download
666.5K
Tranquility download
663.0K
African slave download
729.5K
Beyonder I download
747.0K
Beyonder II download
717.5K
Beyonder III download
706.0K
Oh my people download
684.5K
What will you do download
622.5K
Tough enough download
744.5K
Unholy Alliance download
IN COLLECTIONS
Internet Records Compact Disc collection Samples OnlyUploaded by underscor on